in 2007 Wyatt was raised as a
Seventh Day Adventist. He retained a belief in
Biblical literalism as an adult. Wyatt was working as a
nurse anesthetist in a hospital in Madison, Tennessee, when, in 1960, he saw a picture in
Life of the
Durupınar site, a boat-like shape on a mountain near
Mount Ararat. The resulting widespread speculation in
evangelical Christian circles that this might be
Noah's Ark started Wyatt on his career as an amateur archaeologist. From 1977 onward, he made more than a hundred trips to the
Middle East, developing his interests in the
Old and
New Testaments. By the time of his death in 1999, Wyatt claimed to have discovered several sites and artifacts related to the
Bible and
biblical archaeology, including
the Red Sea crossing,
Mount Sinai, the site of the
crucifixion of Jesus, and the
Ark of the Covenant.
Death Wyatt died of bone cancer, on August 4, 1999, aged 66, at the Baptist Memorial Hospital in
Memphis, Tennessee. His remains are buried in Polk Memorial Park Cemetery, in
Columbia, Tennessee. == Media attention ==